Thank you, Arthur, and good morning to all. I plan to start on page four and five of the presentation where I will briefly summarize the financial results for the fourth quarter and full year of 2025. Subsequently, I will go into further detail on each business segment. As a reminder, we closed what we call the HDFS transaction in Q4 at the October. The HDFS transaction is a strategic partnership with KKR and PIMCO, that we expect will transform Harley-Davidson Financial Services into a capital-light derisked business model. It also changes the financial profile of HDFS starting in '25 and affords a high degree of optionality in how we fund and run that business. As already cited earlier, the financial results in 2025 have come under pressure in the current challenging operating environment. We have moved immediately to make inventory management and discipline a central focus to resetting the business. This is evident in Q4 results and will continue to be a central priority as we move forward. Let me start with consolidated financial results for 2025. Consolidated revenue in the fourth quarter was down 28% driven by both HDMC revenue being down 10% and by HDFS revenue being down 59%. Consolidated operating income in the fourth quarter came in at a loss of $361 million compared to an operating loss of $193 million in 2024. This was driven by an operating loss of $260 million at HDMC and an operating loss of $82 million at HDFS. The loss at HDFS was driven by costs associated with liability management activities related to the HDFS transaction where we retired a significant portion of HDFS debt in Q4 2025. The operating loss at LiveWire was $18 million, which was in line with our expectations and $8 million favorable to a year ago. In Q4, earnings per share was a loss of $2.44, which compares to a loss of $0.93 in 2024. Turning to full year 2025, consolidated financial results on page five. Consolidated revenue of $4.5 billion was 14% lower compared to last year, while consolidated operating income of $387 million compares to $417 million in full year 2024. For the full year 2025, earnings per share were $2.78, and compares to $3.44 in full year 2024. Now turning to page six and HDMC retail performance. As Arthur already mentioned, in Q4, North American retail sales of new motorcycles were up 5% with 15,847 motorcycles versus prior year. In Q4, international retail sales of new motorcycles were down 10%, with 9,440 motorcycles versus prior year, resulting in Q4 global retail sales of new motorcycles being down 1% at 25,287 motorcycles versus the prior year. The choppiness and volatility in global retail results is a continuation of what we have observed since mid-2024 with a difficult global backdrop in big-ticket discretionary sectors. Pricing continues to be on the top of customers' minds given the current global setup that includes inflationary pressures and interest rates that continue to run above recent historical lows. In North America, Q4 retail sales were up 5%, where US retail sales were up 6% and Canada retail sales down 7%. For the full year 2025, North America retail sales were down 13%. In the quarter, we experienced strength in our Grand American touring product, up 6%, driven by the promotional support in the marketplace. We also saw strength in lower-priced sport motorcycle models, up 33%, as the updated pricing and marketing resonated with our dealers and customers. Within Grand American Touring, Trike was down 24% on very tight inventory availability in advance of the January 2026 new Trike launch. In EMEA, Q4 retail sales declined by 24% driven by weakness across the region and different bike families. EMEA continued to be adversely impacted by overall macroeconomic conditions. For the full year 2025, EMEA retail sales were down 11%. In the quarter, we experienced the most weakness in the touring and Softail categories. In Asia Pacific, Q4 retail sales declined by 1%, which was a significant improvement from the 2025 and mostly attributed to a continued challenging environment in China, which was down meaningfully. The Q4 retail sales included positive results in Japan and the Asia Emerging Markets. For the full year 2025, Asia Pacific retail sales were down 15%, and the softness was most acute in China for the full year and Japan for 2025. In the quarter, we saw retail strength across all families except for sport and lightweight motorcycles, which still had a combined inventory down nearly 30%. In Latin America, Q4 retail sales increased by 10% where both Brazil, our largest Latin American market, and Mexico were up, while other Latin American countries were down modestly year over year. For the full year 2025, Latin American retail sales were up 2% where both Brazil and Mexico were up. For the full year 2025, global retail sales of new motorcycles were down 12% versus the prior year where both North America and international markets turned in a similar performance. As already mentioned earlier, dealer inventory at the end of Q4 was down 17% versus the end of Q4 in the prior year. This compares to our stated goal at the beginning of 2025 of reducing dealer inventory by 10%. North America dealer inventory ended down 16% and international dealer inventory ended down 20%, with the regions coming in between down 19% to down 23%. This allows Harley-Davidson, Inc. dealers to start the 2026 riding season much cleaner and with an appropriate setup as we look at the coming quarters. As discussed, we specifically focused on assisting dealers to reduce touring motorcycle inventory in North America as the market displayed its price and value sensitivity. Let me briefly touch on incentive and promotional spend within the current environment. In Q4, we selectively provided incentive and promotional support to Harley-Davidson, Inc. dealers in the form of interest rate assistance, low APR, customer cash, and dealer cash credit. As I covered last quarter and Arthur mentioned earlier, dealers have more touring inventory in the channel than is desired. And while we have made progress in Q4, we still have more work to do. Based upon discussions with our dealers in December 2025, we determined to continue with consumer promotion into 2026 in order to work through these units and, therefore, we have taken accrual in our Q4 2025 financials. Again, we expect this will help us get out of the gate stronger in 2026 to help drive retail performance. Now turning to page seven and HDMC revenue performance. In Q4, HDMC revenue decreased by 10% coming in at $379 million, where the biggest drivers of the decline included net pricing and incentive spend and decreased wholesale volume. For the full year 2025, HDMC revenue decreased by 13% coming in at $3.6 billion, where the biggest driver of the decline was decreased wholesale volumes where we shipped around 125,000 motorcycles, down 16% from the prior year while net pricing was largely flat on the year. Now turning to page eight and HDMC margin performance. In Q4, HDMC gross profit came in at a loss of $30 million, which compares to a loss of $3 million in the prior year. Q4 is typically our lowest gross margin quarter due to seasonality and model year changeover. The year-over-year decrease was driven by the negative impacts from increased tariff costs and net pricing and incentive spend, while partially offset by the positive impacts from manufacturing costs, including leverage, and favorable foreign exchange. In Q4, operating expenses totaled $230 million, which was $19 million higher compared to the prior year or 9%, due to greater marketing spend with the introduction of the North America-focused marketing development fund for our dealers. In Q4, HDMC had an operating loss of $260 million, which compares to an operating loss of $214 million in the prior year period. Turning our attention to full year 2025 margins. For the full year 2025, HDMC gross margin was 24.2%, which compares to 28% in the prior year. A decrease of 380 basis points was driven by the negative impacts from incremental tariffs in calendar year 2025, which we will cover on the next slide, negative operating leverage, and lower volumes. These impacts were partially offset by the positive performance from lower supply management and logistics costs, favorable mix, foreign exchange, and net pricing was largely flat for the full year. Lastly, for the full year of 2025, operating expenses came in at $895 million, which were higher by $18 million due primarily to the marketing development fund mentioned previously. For the full year 2025, HDMC operating income was a loss of $29 million, which compares to operating income of $278 million for the full year 2024. Turning to Slide 12. In 2025, the global tariff environment was more volatile and uncertain than we had expected at the beginning of the year. In 2025, the cost of new or increased tariffs was $22 million, and for the full year of 2025, the cost of new or increased tariffs was $67 million. This included direct tariff exposure, Harley-Davidson, Inc. importing and exporting product, as well as indirect tariff exposure from suppliers. This excluded pricing mitigation actions as well as operational costs relating to new or increased tariffs. Harley-Davidson, Inc. is a business very centered in and around the United States. Three of our four manufacturing centers are US-based, and 100% of our US core products is manufactured in the US. We also have a US-centric approach to sourcing, with approximately 75% of component purchasing coming from the US. We have a number of actions underway to mitigate the impact, and we expect this situation will remain fluid given the uncertainty that still exists. As mentioned earlier, we closed the HDFS transaction in Q4 at the October. Just to restate or recap what we talked about in greater detail on the last earnings call, the HDFS transaction includes three key components: back book sale, sale of approximately $6 billion of existing HDFS loan receivables, forward flow agreements, the sale of future HDFS loan originations, and the sale of equity interest, sale of a 9.8% common equity interest in HDFS to KKR and PIMCO. In the fourth quarter, we retired a significant portion of HDFS debt, which resulted in some discrete costs. These discrete liability management costs were $73 million in Q4. While the full year results were record high earnings for HDFS, '5 resulted in an operating loss of $82 million for HDFS. Let me provide some greater detail. At Harley-Davidson Financial Services, Q4 revenue came in at $106 million versus $257 million in the prior year. The Q4 decrease was driven by lower retail and wholesale finance receivables at lower yields. The decline in retail receivables was due to the sale of the retail back book in the HDFS transaction. Interest income decreased in Q4 from $224 million in '24 to $46 million in '5, while other income increased to $60 million due to new servicing fee streams. On the expense side, Q4 interest expense increased $130 million from $95 million a year ago. This line item included the $73 million of discrete liability management costs to retire HDFS indebtedness. The provision for credit losses decreased to $7 million in Q4 from $72 million a year ago on lower retail finance receivables. Last, operating expenses came in at $51 million in Q4 versus $43 million a year ago, primarily driven by increased hedging costs and employee costs. In Q4, HDFS operating income came in at a loss of $82 million. For the full year 2025, HDFS revenue was $809 million, down 16% from the prior year primarily due to lower retail receivables and lower wholesale receivables due to the transaction. For the full year 2025, interest income decreased from $891 million to $668 million. For the full year 2025, other income increased $148 million to $201 million in the prior year, primarily driven by a discrete gain on the sale of residual interest in securitizations, a component of the HDFS transaction, and by servicing fee income. For the full year 2025, HDFS operating income was $490 million, record high earnings for HDFS, up from $248 million in full year 2024. The increase was primarily driven by favorable provision for credit loss expense due to the HDFS transaction impact and higher other income, partially offset by lower net interest income and higher operating expenses. With the sale of $6 billion of retail finance receivables, the provision for credit loss line item became favorable rather than a cost, reflecting the release of CECL allowance associated with the sold loans. Turning to HDFS loan origination activities. Total retail loan originations in Q4 were up 2%, coming in at $487 million in Q4. Commercial receivables came in at $949 million at the end of the year, relative to the prior year level of $1 billion, down 6%, reflecting overall lower dealer inventory levels in the channel. Total gross financing receivables were $2 billion at the end of 2025, where retail receivables were $1 billion and commercial receivables were $949 million. This is a significant change relative to a year ago, resulting from the sale of around $6 billion of HDFS retail loan receivables as part of the HDFS transaction. For comparison purposes, gross financing receivables were $7.7 billion at the end of 2024, which includes both retail loans and commercial financing. Total HDFS loan assets fell 74% year over year as we shift to a capital-light business model that carried less risk. Now turning to slide 13. For the LiveWire segment, on a full-year basis, electric motorcycle units increased by 7% and Stasic units increased by 15%, while consolidated revenue decreased by 3% due to increased incentives associated with the Twist and Go promotion. LiveWire maintained its position as number one retailer in the US 50-plus horsepower on-road EV segment and had its second consecutive record-setting quarter for retail sales. Consolidated operating loss decreased by 32%, driving a 45% decrease in net cash used during the year, excluding the $75 million of proceeds from the term loan with HD. During 2025, LiveWire consolidated revenue increased by 9%, driven by a 61% increase in electric motorcycle units and a 7% increase in Stasic units. Consolidated operating loss decreased by 30%. For 2026, LiveWire's focus is on the launch of its S4 Honcho products, with production targeted to begin in 2026, continued network expansion, cost savings and improvement, and product innovation and development focused on profitable products. Now turning to slide 14. Wrapping up with consolidated Harley-Davidson, Inc. financial results. We delivered $569 million of operating cash flow in full year 2025, which was down from $1.064 billion in full year 2024. The decrease in operating cash flow was driven by lower motorcycle shipment volumes and unfavorable manufacturing and tariff costs, as well as originations of retail finance receivables classified as held for sale, which are classified as operating cash outflows. There were no originations of retail finance receivables held for sale in 2024, so the net outflows related to this activity contributed to the decrease in operating cash flows. Total cash and cash equivalents ended at $3.1 billion, which was $1.5 billion higher than a year ago. The HDFS transaction facilitated a dividend of $1 billion from HDFS to HDI in Q4, which together with a further dividend expected to be paid in Q1 results in a total dividend that will be consistent with our original expectation. In addition, HDFS debt will be further reduced by the maturity of a €700 million medium-term note in Q2. As part of our capital allocation strategy, in Q4, we entered into an accelerated share repurchase agreement with Goldman Sachs to repurchase $200 million of shares of the company's common stock. We entered into the $200 million ASR, $160 million was delivered before 12/31, with the remainder early 2026. For the full year 2025, we repurchased a total value of $347 million or 13.1 million shares in total, which represents around 11% of 12/31/2024 shares outstanding. This amount includes the aforementioned ASR agreement. Now turning to slide 16. While 2025 was a more volatile and challenging year than we had anticipated, we look to 2026 where we start the year at more appropriate dealer inventory levels and look to reset the business toward a more stable operating and financial future. As we look to our financial outlook for 2026, we remain pleased with our leading market share position in the US, new model year '26 motorcycle launch, including the all-new redesigned trike models, as well as the long-haul touring and the introduction of a more affordable lineup of motorcycles with a focus on critical price point motorcycles to help stoke demand. At HDMC, we expect retail units of 130,000 to 135,000. We expect wholesale units of 130,000 to 135,000. As you can see, we believe that global dealer inventory levels are at appropriate total levels with some need to balance by model and family. Therefore, we expect retail and wholesale to have a largely one-to-one relationship in 2026. At the same time, we expect production units at HDFC to be lower than wholesale units shipped in 2026 as we work to prudently manage overall company inventory levels. For 2026, we expect this will have a deleverage impact, which will pressure operating leverage when it comes to operating margins. In addition, we expect to face a greater overall cost for incremental tariffs in 2026, which are likely to be applied more uniformly over the entire calendar year, whereas 2025 experienced partial application during the year and was backloaded. As a reminder, in full year 2025, we incurred a cost of $67 million in new or increased tariffs. And in 2026, we forecast the cost of between $75 million to $105 million of new or increased tariffs based on current tariff levels and versus the 2024 baseline. At HDMC, we expect operating income of positive $10 million to a loss of $40 million. At HDFS, we expect operating income of $45 million to $60 million. The forecast is based on the new business model at HDFS given the HDFS transaction where Harley-Davidson Financial Services now employs a capital-light derisked business model and has significantly changed financial earnings profile relative to before the transaction was done, particularly in the near term. Additionally, both retail and wholesale asset levels are lower than we previously believed, and non-servicing fee income is also being viewed more cautiously. At LiveWire, LiveWire is forecasting an operating loss in the range of $70 million to $80 million. These guidance elements exclude impacts from our updated strategic plan, which we are looking forward to announcing in May along with Q1 earnings. And with that, we'll open it up to Q&A.